grahamfitter
Expedition Leader
I took some pictures during a kayak trip through the Grand Canyon a couple of weeks ago. One of the problems I found was we were usually in a part of the canyon in the shade and the rest of the view was in the sun.
Since I'm not a real photographer I normally just put the camera on the landscape setting and push the make-it-so button. The foreground is OK but the background is washed out.
The camera (D70s) conveniently flashes the saturated highlight areas which will just turn out white. So I grumble a bit and twist the dial to one of the manual settings and under expose by enough so there's no flashing highlights. In the Grand Canyon this was usually two full stops. Now the background is OK but the foreground is really dark.
View attachment 11427View attachment 11428
My intention is to load the darker image into Photoshop Elements and adjust the levels to coax detail from the shadows. (I need to upgrade my iMac before I do this because the display is really dim and I'll end up over cooking everything.)
If it makes any difference, I did shoot Nikon NEF raw images but converted them all to JPEG because my older iPhoto version can't handle NEF. I'm told iPhoto on the new iMac handles NEF OK.
My big questions are:
Cheers,
Graham
Since I'm not a real photographer I normally just put the camera on the landscape setting and push the make-it-so button. The foreground is OK but the background is washed out.
The camera (D70s) conveniently flashes the saturated highlight areas which will just turn out white. So I grumble a bit and twist the dial to one of the manual settings and under expose by enough so there's no flashing highlights. In the Grand Canyon this was usually two full stops. Now the background is OK but the foreground is really dark.
View attachment 11427View attachment 11428
My intention is to load the darker image into Photoshop Elements and adjust the levels to coax detail from the shadows. (I need to upgrade my iMac before I do this because the display is really dim and I'll end up over cooking everything.)
If it makes any difference, I did shoot Nikon NEF raw images but converted them all to JPEG because my older iPhoto version can't handle NEF. I'm told iPhoto on the new iMac handles NEF OK.
My big questions are:
- Could I have made my life easier by doing something different when I took the photo?
- What's the quickest, easiest way to fix the image so it still looks real?
Cheers,
Graham